Chrissey Stull used to sweat so much she couldn't hold a needle … social situations were the worst.
"Shaking people's hands and just human contact in general was horrible. It was extremely embarrassing," Chrissey said.
Chrissey suffered from excessive sweating, or hyperhidrosis. it can affect a person's hands, arm pits, feet and face.
"The sympathetic nervous system is wired abnormally in these people so that they're more sensitive to the normal triggers for sweating," Dr. Curtis Dickman said.
Surgery used to mean cutting open the chest and a week or more in the hospital.
"It was a tremendously painful procedure and was very difficult to identify these sympathetic nerves with that very invasive technique," Dr. Dickman said.
Now doctors make two small incisions under the arm pit and cut the nerve that supplies the sweat glands. Patients go home the same day.
"It changes the way that the body sweats. The patients no longer sweat on their hands or their armpits, and sometimes on their head and face they also have diminished sweating," Dr. Dickman said.
In a recent study of 300 patients, the surgery was successful in treating over 99-percent of those with hyperhidrosis of the hands and 61-percent of those with excessive sweating under the arms.
Chrissey can exercise, play with her dogs, and do all the things she loves -- no sweat!